Castroneves ends rough week with victory

The Brazilian won the IndyCar Grand Prix of Sonoma at Infineon
Raceway from the pole in a backup car Sunday, just four days
after a transporter fire severely damaged his primary vehicle
and pit equipment.

It was Castroneves' first win this season, 13th career, and
snapped a 29-race winless skid.

"I've been waiting so long for this," Castroneves said. "Let me
tell you, these guys worked 24-7 to get us ready after our cars
and stuff burned. Oh my God, this is just awesome."

Castroneves' Team Penske teammate Ryan Briscoe, also using
replacement equipment due to the transporter fire this past
Wednesday in Wyoming, was second.

Castroneves beat Briscoe across the finish line by 5.292 seconds
to pick up his first victory since the 2007 race on the streets
of St. Petersburg.

Despite the top-five finishes, both Kanaan and Wheldon were
eliminated from championship contention, meaning it is a two-man
race for the title between Castroneves and Scott Dixon.

Dixon, the series leader, finished 12th on Sunday and saw his
lead atop the standings over Castroneves cut from 78 points to
just 43 with three races remaining.

"We did absolutely nothing right today," a visibly upset Dixon
said as he stormed off the track. "We did everything wrong."

It was only Dixon's third finish outside the top 10 this season
through the first 15 races.

Castroneves also collected three bonus points for leading the
most laps on the 2.303-mile, 12-turn permanent road course.

Castroneves was able to take the checkered flag thanks in part
to his pit strategy. After making the last of his three fuel
stops on lap 57 of the 80-lap event, all he had to do was wait
for the drivers ahead of him to hit pit road.

He then took over the lead for good on lap 59, where rookie E.J.
Viso pitted, and easily led the rest of the way.

"My team kept telling me, 'Push, push, push.' That was fun, a
lot of fun," Castroneves said. "We've been close so often. We
never lost faith."